Tadeu Zagallo 2d61dfd9c1 Replace private bridge categories with private header
Summary:
public

A lot of the core modules have to use private methods in the bridge, specially
since the `RCTBatchedBridge` interface is never exposed. That was leading to a
lot of different private bridge categories spread across different modules,
which makes harder to identify which modules are affected by private API changes.

Replace all the categories with a single private header.

Reviewed By: nicklockwood

Differential Revision: D2757564

fb-gh-sync-id: 793158b9082d542b74a6094ed0db4d5dc3a88f78
2015-12-15 05:40:27 -08:00
..
2015-11-18 15:23:30 -08:00
2015-12-08 13:48:28 -08:00
2015-11-16 22:55:45 -05:00
2015-10-02 14:32:23 -07:00

UIExplorer

The UIExplorer is a sample app that showcases React Native views and modules.

Running this app

Before running the app, make sure you ran:

git clone https://github.com/facebook/react-native.git
cd react-native
npm install

Running on iOS

Mac OS and Xcode are required.

  • Open Examples/UIExplorer/UIExplorer.xcodeproj in Xcode
  • Hit the Run button

See Running on device if you want to use a physical device.

Running on Android

You'll need to have all the prerequisites (SDK, NDK) for Building React Native installed.

Start an Android emulator (Genymotion is recommended).

cd react-native
./gradlew :Examples:UIExplorer:android:app:installDebug
./packager/packager.sh

Note: Building for the first time can take a while.

Open the UIExplorer app in your emulator.

See Running on Device in case you want to use a physical device.

Built from source

Building the app on both iOS and Android means building the React Native framework from source. This way you're running the latest native and JS code the way you see it in your clone of the github repo.

This is different from apps created using react-native init which have a dependency on a specific version of React Native JS and native code, declared in a package.json file (and build.gradle for Android apps).